I am working on a chatting application in WPF and I want to use emoticons in it. I am working on WPF app. I want to read emoticons which are coming from Android/iOS devices and show respective images.
On WPF, I am getting a black Emoticon looking like . I somehow got a library of emoji icons which are saved with respective hex/escaped unicode values. So, I want to convert these symbols of emoticons into UTF-32/escaped unicode so that I can directly replace related emoji icons with them.
I had tried to convert an emoticon to its unicode but end up getting a different string with couple of symbols, which are having different unicode.
string unicodeString = "\u1F642"; // represents 🙂
Encoding unicode = Encoding.Unicode;
byte[] unicodeBytes = unicode.GetBytes(unicodeString);
char[] unicodeChars = new char[unicode.GetCharCount(unicodeBytes, 0, unicodeBytes.Length)];
unicode.GetChars(unicodeBytes, 0, unicodeBytes.Length, unicodeChars, 0);
string asciiString = new string(unicodeChars);
Any help is appreciated!!
Your escaped Unicode String is invalid in C#.
string unicodeString = "\u1F642"; // represents 🙂
This piece of code doesnt represent the "slightly smiling face" since C# only respects the first 4 characters - representing an UTF-16 (with 2 Bytes).
So what you actually get is the letter representing 1F64
followed by a simple 2
.
http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/1f64/index.htm
So this: ὤ2
If you want to type hex with 4 Bytes and get the corresponding string you have to use:
var unicodeString = char.ConvertFromUtf32(0x1F642);
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.char.convertfromutf32(v=vs.110).aspx
or you could write it like this:
\uD83D\uDE42
This string can than be parsed like this, to get your desired result which is again is the hex value that we started with:
var x = char.ConvertFromUtf32(0x1F642);
var enc = new UTF32Encoding(true, false);
var bytes = enc.GetBytes(x);
var hex = new StringBuilder();
for (int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++)
{
hex.AppendFormat("{0:x2}", bytes[i]);
}
var o = hex.ToString();
//result is 0001F642
(The result has the leading Zeros, since an UTF-32 is always 4 Bytes)
Instead of the for Loop you can also use BitConverter.ToString(byte[])
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/3a733s97(v=vs.110).aspx the result than will look like:
var x = char.ConvertFromUtf32(0x1F642);
var enc = new UTF32Encoding(true, false);
var bytes = enc.GetBytes(x);
var o = BitConverter.ToString(bytes);
//result is 00-01-F6-42